The missiles do not appear to be intercontinental type missiles: "One U.S. government official told FOX News that if the first were the Taepodong missile, it was 'a real big dud.'"
Also today, from the Washington Post, China and North Korea announced they would "exchange visits by high-ranking officials, providing a window of opportunity for Beijing to dissuade Pyongyang from going ahead with a possible missile test and return to international nuclear disarmament talks."
The Chinese are apparently a little late.
UPDATE: The Daily Telegraph (Australia) now reports that the Taepodong-2 missile from the site at Musudan-ri. They report the missile "failed in flight."
Forbes reports more details about the earlier missiles. They were apparently Rodong missiles, the North Korean version of the Scud. They both crashed into the Sea of Japan.
UPDATE 2: The Washington Post has a good summary of the last few days of news. They quote a Pentagon official's e-mail after the incident: "'None posed a threat [and] no action [was] required.'" The missile failed after about 35 seconds, he confirmed."
They refer to the Scud-type missiles as Nodong, not Rodong.
PREVIOUSLY:
- North Korea Blusters
- North Korea Expected To Launch Some Missile This Summer
- US Politicians Blather On About North Korea
- North Korea May Have Completed Launch Prep
- The Advice On North Korea Is Statesmanlike But Perhaps A Little Late
- Recent & Peculiar Events Inside North Korea
- North Korea: Little Signal, Much Noise
- "We can learn as much from the test as the North Koreans can."
- North Korea Threatens War Because It Cannot Feed Its People
Technorati tags: North Korea | United States
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